12.10.2012

What Filter was that?!?

a post on post ettiquette.


So we've all seen it, right? That post where you thought "Oh my Gosh, they did not seriously write that on facebook?!"

Or the image that something just looks ... off... and someone has posted a comment about it, telling the photographer (or worse, the client) what is wrong with the image and that they could have done better. 


Or my absolute favorite "well, you can get better pics if you come to me, the sitting plus all pix on disk is only $25."

We, as an industry, and even as clients, need an intervention. When common courtesy and even common sense have gone out the window, we need a Manners Movement. 

I've asked photographers all over the US to add to this list of things that are "Do's and Don'ts for posting and commenting on Facebook." If you are a photographer, or a client of a photographer, this list is for you. 

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Ready? Then lets just do this!

1. DO remember that when posting something online it can be very hard to convey sarcasm, inside jokes, etc. 
Be very careful, because things often look about ten times "ruder" in a comment than they do anywhere else. 

2. DON'T comment or post with any CC (critique) unless it's asked for.
If you're seeing a photo posted anywhere other than a closed group, it's probably best to NOT post CC. If you have something to say, private message it to the photographer - but don't expect it to be taken well. 


3. DO remember that every photograph that includes a person, that person will probably see that image - and every single comment. 
Is your opinion worth hurting them over?

4. DON'T post anything you wouldn't say to someone's face - client or photographer. 

That person has real feelings. The old adage "If you can't say anything nice, then don't say anything at all" applies here.  Anything you write, the actual client and their family may see it. Just because you can write whatever you want to, doesn't mean you should. 

5. DO Remember, art is subjective. 
People hire photographers based on what they have seen them do. Some people are very traditional, and some people are not. And just because you don't like something does NOT mean you have to post that opinion.

6. DO think about writing an encouraging comment on a photo or share a photo whenever you can - not just click the "like" button. 
Commenting on photos can really make the day of the client, possibly even change their self image, and they always make a photographer feel great (even better than a simple "like"). 

7. DON'T be afraid to delete negative comments and block the person from your page. 
You have the right and responsibility to protect your clients. 

8. DO thank your commenters for their kind words. 
It's never a good idea to post and run.

9. Clients, DO tag and mention your photographer when you share an image or use a photo as a profile or cover image. 
It's a wonderful courtesy to your photographer, who will probably look at that photo often to see what your friends have said about it. 

10. DO think before you post anything - a status, an image, a comment. 
Is it beneficial, true, something you'll be ok with a search engine finding in a year? Err on the side of caution.


7.25.2012

School/Daycare Portraits Starter


Want to shoot school portraits?
My daughter's kindergarten photo
Things you'll need to think about:

1. What the school will want images wise (yearbook, ID cards, lunch cards, staff, class, composites, etc)
2. Background and posing, lighting equipment needs
3. Class photos options
4. Kickback to the school details
5. What kinds of package and a la carte options you'll have, and pricing.
6. Shooting day details (you'll want a runner to get classes, a schedule of about 15 minutes per class for individuals, and 10 for class photos), someone to take and organize order forms, and someone with you to keep the kids quiet and clean. Break for lunch built in, staff photo scheduling (best before school starts and on their lunch break - need an order form submitted so you can track your shots) separate day class photos, etc.  7. Your day of kit - You'll also want things like wipes, combs, hand sanitizer, extra order forms, pens, calculator, a spindle for the order forms (you'll want to keep them in the order shot).  8. Parent volunteer needs, and what discount they get for volunteering.
9. How you'll tally up the orders, and prep for lab
10. Getting the names for class photos (and design requirements)11. Proofing printed orders (and lee-way time just in case)
11. Packaging and delivery
12. Missing orders, late orders, reorders, absent kids processes. 
Most (not all) schools need the images prepped for yearbook, class photos, staff photos, and then the individual print packages. Including the yearbook DVD, ID Cards, staff photos (in a small package, 5x7 and 4 wallets) and 4 class photos of each class to the office for school use for free is a good move.
Then the print packages, I like both packages and a la carte. They'll need to be MUCH cheaper than your normal print pricing, as you're planning on bulk. You can even work with a different price list for daycares than public schools than private schools and a whole other price list entirely if they want a "kickback"/fundraiser built in.
When you go in to do the presentation to the school board or PTA, you'll want to know how many people you're presenting to, and have a nice color portfolio proposal for them, and include:
  • School style headshots and what background options you provide, etc.
  • Walk through the process in writing, delivery terms, what you'll provide, etc.
  • Have a copy of the contract you'd require at the back.
  • Show examples of composites you can do, etc. 
  • Show example schedules and timelines
The class portraits and packaging are time consuming, so just make sure you're aware. You'll need to send a class photo sample proof to the school with spaces for names for the teachers to fill in and return to you by a certain date (early enough that you can get your deadlines met), and then you'll need to data entry them on a composite that includes the info the school would like on there. 
You'll also need to decide your ordering process - online proofing, paper proofing, or pre-paid, and discuss terms for handling the kickback (who, where, and when they'll expect the money), reorders, late order, etc. Make sure you have a policy in place, and guidelines. This is harder to track, since you won't have them organized by name in your system, and just usually by school.
Places that offer school envelopes/packaging:

6.21.2012

Gettin' Legal

Disclaimer: This post is in no way to be substituted for or received as legal or tax advice. 
One of the first steps you should take when you start photographing people/pursuing a business is getting yourself legal. (Then, don't forget about these other must-haves!)

If you are charging anyone anything for the products and services you provide, and you're presenting yourself as a professional, then you need to respect the laws as a professional. Not "getting legal" can risk a lot for your clients, and for yourself. Also, business licenses are a public record in most areas, meaning anyone can search and see if you're legal - and anyone can report you if you're not.

No business is outside of these guidelines, and don't assume because you "don't make much" that you don't have tax or legal obligations.

As always, in matters of legalities and taxes, please make sure to consult with your lawyer and accountant (and if you don't have one yet, get one).


Business Licensing Info (by state)
Remember, when deciding what business structure is best, don't ask other photographers - ask the experts. Talk to your accountant and lawyer and get their recommendation on what would protect you, your life, your family and your business most. Some cities will also require separate, additional licenses to operate or work within them. 
Alabama
Alaska
Arizona
Arkansas
California
Colorado
Connecticut
Delaware
District of Columbia
Florida
Georgia
Hawaii
Idaho
Illinois
Indiana
Iowa
Kansas
Kentucky
Louisiana
Maine
Maryland
Massachusetts
Michigan
Minnesota
Mississippi
Missouri
Montana
Nebraska
Nevada
New Hampshire
New Jersey
New Mexico
New York
North Carolina
North Dakota
Ohio
Oklahoma
Oregon
Pennsylvania
Rhode Island
South Carolina
South Dakota
Tennessee
Texas
Utah
Vermont
Virginia
Washington
West Virginia
Wisconsin
Wyoming


Protecting your business name, logo, etc
Trademark


And of course, you'll want to secure insurance, accounting software, a business bank account, etc to help keep everything straight ... and to protect your clients, yourself and your business. 



4.27.2012

Atlanta Photographers: NILMDTS

This comes from Beverly at Chuck Williams Photography:

ATLANTA PHOTOGRAPHERS.... I'm going to share this again, as lots of comments have been added and WE NEED MORE HELP! Please take the time to read this. If you are not a photographer, but know someone who is, please click "SHARE" and share this with them.

In the meantime, I encourage anyone reading this to Visit the website for Now I Lay Me Down To Sleep. It's an amazing organization of which I am proud to be a part. At the request of a family who loses a child at birth, we go in and photograph the baby and the family together, as they will never take their baby home and these are the only professional images they will ever have of this child.

These babies are precious....they are like sweet, sleeping babies. They are "people" - they have a name...they are loved. And when we go in to photograph them, we love them and talk to them just as if they were sleeping.

If you have ever experienced the loss of a baby or a child, you will know how much a parent appreciates this service. The photographers are all volunteers. We volunteer our time, our services and it's a heartfelt mission for us. You wouldn't think that in this day and time there would be many babies that die at birth...Unfortunately that is not the case. Sometimes we get multiple calls in the same day for hospitals right around here. And unfortunately, because we don't have enough help, sometimes we have to tell the parents that there's not a photographer available.

So, If you're a photographer and you think this is something you might be able to do, PLEASE reach out to Jessica Ball Duplantis, Angie Thompson, Stuart Hasson who are coordinators for Atlanta. If I can help you, I'd be happy to as well. Contact NILMDTS now!

If you're interested, click on Beverly's name above, or you can contact NILMDTS directly.

4.23.2012

Online Workshop in May: Business, Branding and Beyond

Business, Branding and Beyond Online Workshop





Registration is open NOW. Closes 5/17/2012


The Workshop will run:
Friday 5/18 10:00 a.m. - 3:00 p.m. PST
Saturday 5/19 9:00 a.m. - 3:00 p.m. PST
Sunday 5/20 9:00 a.m. - 3:00 p.m. PST

All days will be recorded. :)




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Schedule of Learning and Discussion:
In person sales (including a sales appointment)
Scripting for inquiries and sales
Answering tough questions
Planning your marketing year
Making sure you've covered your policy bases
Branding cohesiveness
Networking and marketing both online and off
Questions and answers

Open to Professional Photographers ONLY (those who want to make a living as a photographer, not those just learning their cameras).

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We will be covering:
Marketing
Sales
Social Media
Business
Branding

Virtual Only - every attendee receives a free phone consultation with Kate with registration.
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There are awesome vendor giveaways and swag bags, videos from the workshop, plus a secret group following the workshop just for attendees.

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This workshop runs from Friday 5/18- Sunday 5/20.

$75 per attendee. Must be paid by 5/17/2012 in full; Register here: http://tinyurl.com/MayPhotogWorkshop

3.04.2012

Timeline for Your Brand: Tips and Best Practices


By now, you know that Timeline has come to Facebook Brand Pages.
Some of us are embracing it, as a champion of change. 

No matter what, your page will automatically switch over to Timeline at the end of March 2012. 

Did you know that your attitude about change is one of the biggest indicators of your success and potential for future growth? That being said... knowing the most you can about Timeline can help you approach it with an open mind and see that it really can be the best thing for your business - default landing tabs, or not. 

I'll have a full list of resources and recommended reading and things to view at the end of the post. 
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Let's start at the top, with the Cover Image. Now, there are some ground rules that Facebook has put into place for this prime retail space, and they're important to take note of:


And while I've heard complaints about this and not understanding the rationale behind it, you have to understand, they want the Cover photo to be clean and professional and free of the spam feeling. It's basically like a city having building requirements for the appearance of a building, the cover is FB's "building appearance".  They've given us the "post pin" option to allow us to market to our visitors in place of marketing on our covers. We'll talk about this later.

The size for the Cover image is 851 x 315px. There are resolution problem being reported across the board, and it seems to be that way regardless of what people are trying. There are a few places offering Timeline templates: Florabella, Fototale Designs, Ashe Design, EW CoutureAlbumCafe, Schweppes ProfileApp, The Shoppe, MCP Actions, UkanduRed Boot Design and Paint the Moon


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Now, don't forget to customize that awesome profile photo! Obviously, the big old banners we used to have are way too big, so we've moved down to a 180 x 180 size. 






Find something to represent your business that will not only be recognizable in the ticker and news feeds, but also that compliments your cover image really well. Be creative here. So far there are no guidelines for your profile photo. I'll keep you in the loop when I start to hear otherwise. 
________


The next area you can customize is the app buttons and app order. When you first activate your Timeline on your business page, your apps will be in a random order. There are 4 "Featured" Apps, and you get to choose 3. Photos is a permanently featured app on your page (kind of cool for photographers!). 

The other 3 you choose to Feature are up to you. You can rotate these, so this isn't a life or death decision. However, these should be places you want your visitors to notice. Whether that's your Welcome App to explain your experience, your Store, your blog, your pinterest App, or your Portfolio Slideshow App, make sure they are right for your brand and your business. 

Now you'll also notice, there is a little "8" with a drop down arrow next to my Featured apps. Your fans can see a total of 12 apps on your page. You get to choose 10 of those (Photos and Likes are permanents), like this:


With all of the apps, you can put them in any order you choose. On the upper right hand corner of the app square, there is a pencil. When you click the pencil, you can choose to swap it's position with another app. Also on that pencil, you can "Edit Settings". That is where you can change the display name of the app and change the display picture, as I have done here. I designed the branded images for each of my apps and the dimensions are 111 x 74px. 

Some app hosts have moved over to the Timeline full width app designers, and I'm hosting most of mine (Who are We, Pinteresting, BlogSite, Our Newsletter, Twitter, & STK University Vids) at this point on ShortStack's Timeline width (810px). There are several versions of ShortStack, and there is more customization available at the $30 a month version (like the little blue arrow icons you see - you can change those at that level), but everything I've done right now is on the free level. All the custom app buttons can be done with any app on Facebook, it is not just with ShortStack apps. 

Here's the other fun thing that a lot of business owners don't know yet ... bury that "Likes". Mine is the last on my apps. There's a reason for that. Did you know ANYONE can click on that and see a small overview of your insights? You can go to your competitors and see who is talking about them and how they're doing and when they've gotten the best involvement on their page. It's like public marketing research available on our  pages. It will still be there, of course, and people will still be able to find it (there is no "hide"), but at least it won't be screaming in your prospective clients faces as a Featured App.


The biggest change is there is no default landing tab, but this isn't really a detriment. While you may hear about fan-gating as an option still being available, I have been testing it not only on my own page (see my Who Are We app, below), but on other pages as well. If you go to the app, you can still click on the Business Page name, and it will load the Timeline in full, so it's not really locking out your page information to those who haven't "Liked" you, regardless of settings. Some are recommending using a contest or incentive in place of the fan-gate to Incentivize your "Like-Gate" instead on your Welcome/Start Here apps. 



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Some of the next things you'll see on the page are things like Friends, Mentions, and Recent Posts.



The "Friends" number will change depending on who is viewing the page. It will tell them how many of their friends like your page. The Mentions will have posts by their common friends about their page. It almost works as a recommendation for you, or a review. Then, there is the Recent Posts by others about your page. These things aren't movable, if you have them set up to show on your page when you edit your settings. 

At the top, you'll notice there is a setting selected called "Highlights". Your page is automatically set to that when people visit. If you click the drop down, you can change to view Friend Activity, Posts by the Page, and Posts by Others. These options are available to all of your fans. 



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Now we'll move on to post options. I'm not going to go into depth here, as there's an awesome post by Sarah Lee Williams Photography that goes into great detail about it.

The first feature we'll talk about with posts is the ability to "Pin" a post. This is Facebook's answer to our advertising needs, as it allows us to have something stuck to the top of our Timeline for up to 7 days a time. 
While you can pin statuses or links, the most effective use of a pinned post would be a graphic or sales focused image. If you're having a Mini Session, a sale, looking for Reps or Mombassadors, want them to like your page, or any other call to action, this is your place to do it. 


You can pin a post by clicking the pencil at the top right hand corner of the post and selecting "Pin to top". Voila! You're done! 


You can only pin a post one time, for those 7 days. If you want to pin something for more than 7 days, you'll have to create a whole new post or upload a new image, and pin it again as a new image or post. 


Another thing that Facebook has added in for us is the option to Highlight posts. The Highlight function allows us to spread a post across our entire Timeline. 




This one is easy to do - simply click the little star on the post and choose to highlight it. Right now, I'm using this one for things like blog posts, tips of the day, and things I want to make sure my fans see when they visit my page.
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The last thing I want to cover is adding Milestones. I know that a lot of people feel like they don't have the time to go back and do this, but I urge you, especially as a small business with a personal brand, take the few minutes to go back and add in your moments. Your clients will feel the connection. Add in things like your founding, your 1 year anniversary of business, your 100th client. You'll be so glad you did! (and if big-wigs like Coke feel it's important enough to do, you should, too!).




Go back to any date in your timeline, and add something. You can even change the date of your posts from that handy little pencil. Add a photo, and the story. Have fun with it. Every business has a story - let Timeline help tell yours!
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I wanted to highlight some of the better customization I've seen of Timeline by photographers and those in our industry to date. I will continue to add to these as I see Rockin' designs come across my screen in the near future:










One of our readers that customized her page after reading our post:

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Alright, I promised resources, so here they are:


Learn Facebook Pages (interactive course)
About Facebook Pages
Facebook Pages Help Center
Facebook Pages Guidelines and Rules
ShortStack Facebook Pages Webinar
Customize Posts on Timeline
Dimensions for Facebook Timeline Images
KissMetrics:Timeline Need to Know


Timeline Cover Templates
Florabella
Fototale Designs
Ashe Design
EW Couture
AlbumCafe
Red Boot Design
The Shoppe
Ukandu
MCP Actions
Schweppes ProfileApp
Paint the Moon

Great Series about Timeline for Photography Pages by the Milky Way:
Part 1
Part 2
Part 3
Part 4a


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As always, if you have comments or questions, I'm here to help! Feel free to post below, send me an email, or send me a question via formspring

2.17.2012

Are You Overwhelmed?


If this business didn't get overwhelming, we wouldn't be pushing ourselves past our comfort points, past our limitations and past what was easy - and there would be no possibility for growth and expansion and amazing-ness in our future. We would always be stagnant and never dynamic. We would be a rock. And I don't want to be a rock.

I think sometimes when it is overwhelming like this, as hard as it is to think, that's when we need to realize that it means we are doing it right. That we're making the right moves. When the obstacles and the insurmountable things are thrown in our path to make us rethink and doubt, that should be our "ah-ha" moment to go, yep, something is trying to get me to fail. That's when it's our choice to either fail because we stop trying, or take another step on the path to success regardless of the overwhelming feeling.

At some point in our life, we are imperfect at everything we have ever tried to do. We work within our imperfection through the overwhelming moments and into incredible growth that allows not only our businesses to explode and succeed, but ourselves too. Beyond any potential we could have ever imagined.

Graphic Design by Stacee Taft Photography at DesignBin Studios


Craving a little more Inspiration? See my fun collection of Inspiring things on my Inspiration Pinboard

1.25.2012

My Recent Feature: Pinterest Tab on Facebook



In light of a recent feature by Zach Prez of Photography Web Marketing (see the post here, if you missed it), it was suggested I blog about how to add the Pinterest tab on Facebook.

Pinterest does not have the option, yet, to embed a tag from their app to Facebook. I've used the Static iFrame app with the "Pin" icon at this point.  Click here to install the app on your Fan Page.



After you've installed the tab, it will automatically load as a welcome tab. Click on the tab to edit the settings, and choose the URL button (it will be on HTML):


In the place of the URL, you can either put the URL for a single pinterest board, like  http://pinterest.com/studiotrainer/photography-business-too/   or, to all of your boards in general, like:  http://pinterest.com/studiotrainer/ it's your choice.

Rename the tab to something like "Pinterest" or "Pinteresting",etc and hit save. You're done, and your boards are now live on your business fan page.

Keep in mind, you CANNOT edit the width, and your pinterest page is wide, so there will be scroll bars (your Facebook page can only handle up to 520px wide). It's not the prettiest thing out there, but it works. People will follow you from it, and it's a fun way to share your boards (it's increased my following by over 300 people since I've added it to my page)! Mine look like this on my business page:



I am always on the lookout for a width customizable host, so if you know of one, please let me know. I'd love to hear about it so that I may pass it on.

Follow Me on Pinterest

1.12.2012

Mini-Session Maximizing




Some people love them, and some people hate them. They don't fit every business model, and they aren't for every business person either. As with every marketing avenue you consider, if you can't take the time to do it right and do it well, don't do it until you can. 

Mini-sessions are a Marketing venture first and foremost more than an income generator (although they can definitely be that, too). They are a good way to introduce your business to a new base of clients, although this base of clients will be ones that you will be cultivating and educating on the value of portraiture. They will not be ones that recoginze your value immediately, nor will they instantly be willing to pay your regular boutique level pricing. If you're looking for a quick fix, quick turn client, this is not the answer. This is a long turn, steady client that will go for your mini session a few times a year and eventually turn into a higher dollar client a year or so down the road. This client takes patience, pampering and convincing. 

Still interested? Read on. 

9 Things to consider

1. Marketing ROI
In order to gain Top of Mind Awareness with your target market and get them to respond to your marketing, you need to get your message in front of them at least three times. Don't understand what I mean? Pay attention to radio and television ads. You'll hear their main message and business name at least 3 times during their ad. Remember this for your FB, emails and blog posts (and offline pieces). 

You can also plan that for everything that you do, you can expect about 10% response. Response can be anything from picking up the ad to visiting your site to calling and booking a session. The depth of the response will increase with the number of impressions on the prospect (which is another reason you can't be a 1-and-done). 

2. Repetition
In the same spirit of above, no "1-and-dones".  Plan at least 3 different Mini Sessions this year so you know if it works for you. This will also show your clients that you're not a flake - that they can trust that this is something they can count on for your business (and they can count on your business in general). The more they get used to seeing something from you, the better your booking rate will get, and the higher your ROI will get as a result.  

3. Timing, Booking and Assistance
Part of the Mini Session is about the timing. You want to get promotional photos of these at least 6 weeks prior so that you can begin advertising about a month before the session happens. Sessions should last no more than 30 minutes, and not be booked back to back. Always leave yourself a 10-15 minute window between sessions. Something will inevitably go wrong, someone will be late, and someone else will be early, or someone will really, really REALLY hate Santa (that would be my kid). And no clothing changes on a Mini.  

When booking, try to focus on booking just 1-3 subjects.Too many people and you're bound for a mess.  Don't shoot family Minis unless it's the holidays (and book them a little longer time, like 45 minutes). 

Don't overbook yourself. 25 Mini-Sessions in one day is insanity. You are not wonderwoman and you don't have to try to prove to me or your mama that you are. Even Tamara Lackey would tell you to put that calendar down, girl. Just because there is white space on it doesn't mean you gotta fill it up. 

Don't overbook yourself, pt. 2. Don't book a Mini day every month. You will get burnt out. I promise. 

Always have an Assistant. Make sure someone is there to help you check in your clients, make sure that clothing is straightened, make sure you have water (I swear, its water, not vodka. What do you mean you can smell it on me??) , get a bathroom break if needed, faces cleaned, etc. You never know if you'll need those couple of moments just to regroup. 

4. Style
You are going to have a really hard time making a Mini Session successful if you shoot them just like you do every other session in your portfolio. Mini sessions are different, themed, special. They have that "stylized" feeling. Remember, like I said above, these are people you're introducing to your business, so you should probably do something with a little STYLE for them. Don't make them cookie cutter, give them some edge, give them some spunk, personality, and fun. Theme it if you want, and bring it to life. You want these new prospects to see the best of the best, to be your guinea pigs for your ideas, even. Feel free to try that new thought with them - and don't forget to get those model releases!

The more creative and fun you get, the more interest you'll spark with your marketing and with your brand, and the more you'll be inspired to educate your clients. 

5. Pricing 
There are two major pricing pitfalls I see when most people start to do Mini Sessions. 

Pitfall #1 -- CheapieFreebie (loss leader/might as well have gone groupon). This is the $29 session fee with the free 8x10, 4 5x7s and 5 digital files on a disk mini session. And then, it's even 50% off print prices. 
Yet... no one buys anything more than what they get for free. And why should they. The photographer doesn't get it. They think "But I shot these awesome images and gave great discount, why didn't they buy anything else?" So they email them and follow up, and they never book and the photographer gets irritated and thinks, well, minis aren't for me. 

Pitfall #2 -TheGrownUpMini. This is the $200 (discounted) session fee, 30 minute session, and 20% off prices.

This is fine if you have an established client base and you've been doing minis for several years and your clients are used to your pricing structure. Note: This is not all bad, but you cannot start out with this mini. You can do this mini after a few years and you are a solid, strong business. 

The Right Way (IMHO): The Staring Out Mini: Price your session fee at around $49.99 and either discount your normal prices around 30% OR create a special price list just for Mini Sessions (still should be discounted and presented to them as such when they inquire). Note: I never recommend sending your pricing to your clients (or home with your clients) in any way, shape, or form.  

It's introductory enough that it will weed out the cheap-os, but low enough that people can still swing it. You're also not giving away the farm, and being able to introduce people to your work, and to your pricing on a very custom level that is comfortable for you. 

6. Marketing: Offline and Online
It's important to not rely simply on Facebook, email and your blog for filling your Mini Session spots.Of course, use these mediums, but make sure to use actual flyers as well. 

Partner with local vendors and boutiques to place well done and professional flyers and lay-cards about your mini-session in the weeks leading up to your event. Place these out about 4 weeks before your session dates, and make sure that they feature strong sample images (not too many), emotion words, a strong call to action (ask for the action you want them to take - don't be passive), and your contact information.

With your social media and emails, make sure to use a photo on Facebook and share it multiple times, tag people in it, ask people to share it. Create an event and invite people to it. Share it on Google plus, create a blog post and share it multiple times. Create an email marketing piece and send it out following a marketing strategy over a series of a few days. Tweet about it over different days and a different times. Ask local friends and vendor partners to do the same. 

7. Ordering Appointment
Treat your Mini Session clients as you would all of your regular clients. Do in person ordering, and upsell. Create custom storyboard composites, sample products and collages during their slideshows to show them. Show them your elite collection of products that you have available out of your full price line, too, even if you have created a special pricing guide just for them.

Create the setting, educate them, show them the way you mount your prints, the framing options, show them the difference. If you can, have prints available from the "cheapie" printers versus your pro prints to show them what they're getting from you . Talk about the archival qualities of the papers, the processes of the printing done at the pro-labs. Make sure that you really take the time to go through with them and build that custom experience collection that is perfectly suited to their needs, get their information right in their file, get their model release signed, and ask if you can contact them again for an upcoming mini sessions and studio events. Let them know what they can expect as far as the next part of the process. 

8. Marketing Afterwards
Make sure that you don't forget about these clients! While they're not your target client  - yet!-  you'll still want to make sure you're keeping up with the follow up, the follow through, and the emails. Seriously -  the marketing pieces of everything you offer in with their completed order, the notification of new mini sessions, referral cards for them to hand out, Open House invitations, invitations to Vendor partnership events, client education information blog posts, and anything that you can get in front of them that keeps your name in the forefront and reminds them of the service and the quality they got from you, the better. 

9. The Mini Session Client
And last but not least: The Mini Session client. This is the client that is sort of sick of going to JCPenney and Sears and really hates Walmart. She likes PicturePeople but knows there are still better options out there. Olan Mills kind of appeals to her too ... but she heard from someone, somewhere, that a private studio/photographer is even better... but that same someone told her they're really expensive and she could probably take good pictures with her own camera. Bleh. Maybe she'll just stick with PicturePeople. 

Wait... Oh that picture is really nice. Oh I like those colors. And oh, that price isn't bad, and that's really close to me. 

This is your Miini Session client. Or at least, who they start out as, usually (from my experience). Remember this as you start to work with them, that this is what their biases are. They don't hate you, their just skeptical. 

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So now you've got enough info and ideas to decide if this fits for your business or not. You'll have to let us know what you decide to do and how it goes. And don't forget to track it with a tracking sheet.